Sara Honda works at the University of Colorado Denver. In her free time, she loves mentoring teenage girls, exploring the beautiful sunny state of Colorado, and watching Survivor. She secretly loves professional golf, hates onions and Crocs with a passion, and wishes she was a hip hop dancer.
“How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives.”
― Annie Dillard
A few months ago, a good friend shared this quote with me. At first, the quote made me uneasy. I could see the truth of it, and that’s what hit me. There are a lot of my days that feel routine, that feel mundane. Do I really want my life to reflect the hours I spend riding the train to work every week? That makes me seem too ordinary. Or the hours I spend sitting in front of a computer each day? I’m not exactly saving starving children. What about all those nights I go to bed before 10pm? Does that make me lame? (I swear I’m cool, people. I just like my sleep!)
The more I thought about the quote, the more I began to welcome Dillard’s idea as an invitation rather than a conviction. What if we treated every day and every decision, little or big, relevant or not, as though it really mattered? Not with the pressure that everything is make-or-break, but that the decisions we make will, over time, tell a story of who we are. What we buy/say/do/read/think are indicators of our values.
Our childhood and young adult years are marked by milestones: sweet-16, first car, first kiss, graduation, college, and first job. Many of my friends are encountering adult milestones: engagement, graduate school, marriage, babies, and travel. But I’ve been without any significant cliché life-changing milestones for a few years now. I had become a full-grown adult, and yet for a long time I was waiting for something else to make me feel like I’d reached adulthood. Would the perfect job do it? Maybe I wouldn’t feel like an adult until I was married, or at the very least in a serious and committed relationship. Does it happen when you have a baby? Perhaps if I lived on my own (which I am currently doing, and yet I still feel like a kid)?
I am sure the fact that I sometimes like coloring in coloring books and watching Harry Potter movies has nothing to do with it, nor the fact that I still don’t know how to order an alcoholic drink. “I’ll take one of those alcohol-thingys. Um, the wet kind. Do you have anything pink?”
Over time, I have come to appreciate (with much prodding from God) that my life has already started, and that the seemingly-mundane decisions I make today are in fact meaningful. It’s hard to pinpoint a particular moment over the past few years that significantly changed me, but somehow I’ve evolved. It has been nearly three years since I graduated from college, and in that time I’ve gained confidence, new lifelong friendships, a deeper understanding of God’s presence in my life, and assurance of the ways God has called me to minister to others.
As we get to know ourselves better (and I truly believe this process lasts until the day we die), we are able to recognize when we are not growing. For me, I begin to feel frustrated and ask that ever-present “Why am I here?” It spurs me to get to know someone new, get plugged in to a new group, or take on different responsibilities at work.
Change in my life is not marked by milestone moments, but by the little decisions I make every day that dictate who I am, and who God is shaping me to be. Change is gradual, fluid, and welcome. I know there are still milestone moments to come (good and bad), but I have come to the understanding that these are just another part of the long and constant growth known as my life. God has promised us that a life lived for him will be meaningful and worth living. That has been my journey; appreciating consistency and recognizing that sometimes growth is gradual and occurs without my immediate knowledge. I hope that if your story is similar to mine, you can recognize growth in your life, and that if you do experience change on a more significant level, you can still recognize the change that happens in the quiet lulls in between.









